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Get appxpackage access is denied
Get appxpackage access is denied





get appxpackage access is denied

That’s a long time to go without a solid fix from Microsoft.

get appxpackage access is denied

Like in MS Word, losing the ability to create and/or edit tables.Īs others have said, this is a known bug since Win 10 was in beta testing. If this one is like the previous 2 times, then I’ll eventually lose the functionality of many of the programs themselves, which gradually lose some of their functions and utilities. I’ve reinstalled Win 10 3 times…not upgrades or refreshes, but full, clean, re-installs…this last time the system worked for 2 weeks before losing the Start Menu. Losing not only the Start Menu, but the functionality of most of the icons in the task bar. I’ve tried every recommended solution over the past year when Win 10 was installed by Microsoft. Copy the location the app is installed to.This didn’t work for me on a MS Surface Pro 3. The first bit is the “InstallLocation” line. Once you find it, you need to look for two lines and copy the information there for use in the next step. Open the text file and use the find box to look for the PackageName you found in the first step. C:\Users\YourUserName Find FamilyPackageName & Install location

get appxpackage access is denied

Open this file and then move to the next step. Go to the following location and it will be there. This will create a txt file in your user folder’s location. You can change the name of the text file to whatever you prefer. This is the package name and you will need it in the next step. On the Shortcut tab, note down what’s in the Target field. Go to the desktop, right-click the shortcut, and select Properties from the context menu. The shortcut will be placed on the desktop. Right-click it and select the create shortcut option from the context menu. Look for the app that you want to open from the command line. In the folder that opens, you will see all UWP apps that are installed on your system. Tap the Win+R keyboard shortcut and enter the following. The process is a bit complicated but it’s possible. If you want to open UWP apps from the command line on Windows, you can. If you want to open a UWP app, you can go through the Start Menu, the apps list in the Start menu, you can create a desktop shortcut for them, or add them to the start up folder. One stark difference between the two is that a UWP app doesn’t have an EXE. UWP apps are different from desktop apps in many, many ways.







Get appxpackage access is denied